Hi Guys,
I asked in another thread and it would seem there are a few folks here that would enjoy a discussion about achieving great sound in their homes. For those that missed it here's my background and where the focus will be in this thread...
I was an early adopter of Dolby surround when it was in it's infancy in the early 90's, trained in theater design and in the connection between sound reproduction, human hearing and room acoustics, an active member of the Consumer Electronics Designers and Installers Association (CEDIA) for many years, and have designed and built many media rooms and home theaters professionally.
My passion has always been the pursuit of faithfully and convincingly reproduced stereo and surround music and movie sound tracks. While the selection of equipment and surround sound formats has grown, and there's widespread availability of both technical information and businesses to design and install complete systems, achieving high performance sound is just as challenging today as in the early days. The last 20+ years of speaker, amplifiers, pre-amp, surround decoder and software playback system development hasn't really improved anything because the main limiting factor to the Holy Grail of reproduced audio hasn't been the equipment, it's in the acoustical nature of the rooms themselves. and the placement of speakers, listeners and acoustical treatment within them.
It's pretty easy to achieve a large and high quality picture image, high enough volume and deep enough bass to cause PTSD, and an ultra-plush theater decor, but accurately reproduced sound is the most difficult to achieve. That may not be a concern or priority for most, but for a discerning listener sub-par results can be very disappointing and frustrating. The problem can be compounded by a room that's been optimized for movie soundtracks when then used to listen to music in stereo or surround. Sometimes a room can be optimized for both...and sometimes for neither. It's good to know how suitable a room will be for the intended use, and to consider a better space possibly, and what can then be done to ensure best results.
I'd like to break down key factors affecting reproduced sound quality into two areas, the frequency domain and the time domain.
Frequency Domain
We ideally hear sound in the range of about 20 hz to 20,000 hz, with deep bass notes closer to the 20 HZ end of the scale and very highest notes above 10k hz. As we age our hearing degrades and we may only hear as high as 10,000 hz or so, if that. But most importantly is the range of the human voice and most instruments which are in the area of up to 4000 hz or so, and that's the range we need to be most concerned with. It's no coincidence that human hearing has developed to be most sensitive in this range. This is largely how we know and can recognize voices. If voices are reproduced inaccurately through speakers it's because the frequency response of the sound reaching our ears has been tonally altered by the interaction of the speakers sound with the room's walls, floor and ceiling, aka "room boundaries". Most speaker are able to reproduce fairly tonally accurate sound in the absence of any room boundaries, but in our rooms those surfaces amplify and reduce certain frequencies and change the sound.
I've never met most actors and singers but I know they sound a lot different through my Viper's radio than my home music/theater room where the frequency response of sound reproduced and heard in the room has been carefully calibrated to be tonally accurate. It's important to note the distinction between the sound that your speakers reproduce and the sound that you hear. The two are very different, and the reason is the effect that the room has on what we hear! You've no doubt experience that with the sound of your own voice when talking in acoustically different areas...perhaps in your home theater that has a lot of sound absorption.
We'll be discussing the effect of the room on your systems sound reproduction and figuring out how we can make it so the room doesn't degrade sound quality, and how it can maybe even enhance it!
Time Domain
We largely determine the direction of sound we hear by the difference in the timing that each ear hears it. Sound coming from our right side arrives at our right ear before it arrives at our left ear because that ear is closer and our ear and brain are so highly tuned that they can tell the difference, even small differences. If sound arrives at both ears at the same time, they can tell if it's centered in front or behind us. When we sit dead centered between our stereo speakers listening to music part of what we hear unfortunately is the speaker's sound reflecting off the floor almost immediately, off the ceiling immediately after that, and then off the side walls after that again. And not only does the right speaker's sound bounce off the right side wall but it also bounces off the left wall to further mess up what we call "imaging". A system with good imaging is able to fairly accurately place sounds around our room as existed in the space where it was recorded, or according to how the recording engineer intended it to sound. A system with poor imaging also degrades the intelligibility of dialogue which makes it harder to make out what is being said in movie soundtracks. This loss of "detail" through poor imaging also degrades the sound of music recordings. And we'll be discussing how to ensure that your subwoofer isn't degrading your system's tonal accuracy, imaging and detail.
Our ears hear quite a blurred sound and we lose some important directional cues if we don't do something about it. If we listen to well-recorded music it's really nice to get a sense of where the singers and instruments are located across the stage ("called sound stage"). Recordings also often contain the reflected sounds of the recording venue, perhaps a studio, performing venue, or maybe the outdoors. When these "spacial cues" are accurately reproduced we get a sense of the size and acoustical nature of recording space.
So that's a brief preview of what I want to cover, and why mastering these two areas is critical to being able to accurately reproduce music and movie sound tracks at home. It should be pointed out that reproducing impressive sound quality doesn't necessarily require you to spend a lot of money on modifications to your room, and that no amount spent on modifications to the room will compensate for not adhering to the basics we'll be discussing.
I'd like some of you to post a picture of your music or movie room taken from the back looking forward to show your listening seat, the main speakers, and the front and side walls next to them. We'll discuss that layout, how it affects the sound you hear, and whether there might be a tweak to significantly improve sound quality.
Bruce
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